GAME NOTES: Winners of 27 straight season openers, the 18th-ranked Nebraska
Cornhuskers hope to keep rolling along as they kick off the 2013 campaign
against the visiting Wyoming Cowboys.

Nebraska, which has won every opener since 1986 by at least nine points, opens
the campaign ranked in the preseason poll for the fourth consecutive season.
Last year, head coach Bo Pelini and his crew started off with a 49-20 win
against Southern Miss, won four of their first five games, and eventually went
on to post a 10-2 regular-season mark. A six-game win streak and the Big Ten
Legends Division title sent the team to the conference championship game where
it was pummeled by Wisconsin, 70-31.

Despite the awful showing against the Badgers, Nebraska still made it to the
Capital One Bowl on Jan. 1 versus Georgia, the seventh-ranked team in the
land. Unfortunately, once again the defense for the Huskers let them down in a
45-31 setback.

As for the Cowboys, members of the Mountain West Conference, they had a
particularly tough time of it in 2012 as they won a total of just four games,
finishing 3-5 in league play for head coach Dave Christensen who is now
entering his fifth campaign in Laramie. Last year, was particularly rough on
Christensen when you consider he was named the MWC Coach of the Year in 2011
after leading the team to an 8-5 mark and a bowl bid.

Nebraska has won all six previous meetings with the Cowboys, the first being a
50-0 stomping back in 1934, and the latest a somewhat closer 38-14 decision
two years ago.

There are several key players who return for the Cowboys on offense, namely
quarterback Brett Smith who has all the qualifications for being not only an
all-conference performer, but quite possibly an All-American as well. Smith
was on the mend last year after suffering an injury, yet still stepped up to
complete 62.1 percent of his passes for 2,837 yards and 27 touchdowns, against
only six interceptions.

In addition to his passing prowess, Smith also makes himself a valued piece of
the running game, scoring a team-best six TDs in 10 games in 2012. Considering
the Cowboys are bringing back a number of experienced runners, like Brandon
Miller and D.J. May, Smith should be able to limit the times he over-exposes
himself to aggressive defenses.

"Obviously, Brett (Smith) is a great player in this conference," said coach
Christensen. "He has had a great offseason. He works extremely hard, and is
getting better every day. Brett was very sharp during spring drills. He's done
everything right, and is a tremendous playmaker."

Also working in favor of Smith and the aerial attack, is the return of a trio
of starting receivers in Robert Herron, Jalen Claiborne and Dominic Rufran.
Herron was an all-conference wideout in 2012, separating himself from the pack
by becoming the only player in the Mountain West to have two games with at
least 150 yards receiving.

First and foremost, the Wyoming defense has to replace its top three tacklers
from a year ago, chief among them being linebacker Ghaali Muhammad who paced
the unit with 106 tackles, 10 stops behind the line of scrimmage and four
recovered fumbles. Also on that list are Korey Jones (103 tackles) and Mike
Purcell (93 tackles, eight TFL), leaving Blair Burns as the top returning
tackler after logging a modest 60 stops from his cornerback position.

Clearly, having a player from the secondary be the leading tackler on the
squad is by no means optimal, which is why it is crucial for Eddie Yarbrough
and Justin Bernthaler to get settled in at new positions in order to take some
of the heat off the secondary. Both players are making the move from defensive
end to defensive tackle, opening the door for some new faces to make an
impact.

The Pokes will have their hands full in this contest for sure, considering the
Cornhuskers ranked eighth in the nation in rushing a year ago with 253.4 ypg
and were 26th in total offense with 460.8 ypg. A major factor in all of that
was quarterback Taylor Martinez who returns for his junior campaign.

Martinez, who could become just the second quarterback in Football Bowl
Subdivision history to finish his career with 9,000 passing yards and 3,000 on
the ground, joining Nevada's Colin Kaepernick, is one of only five signal-
callers to have thrown for at least 4,000 yards and run for another 1,500 over
the last two campaigns.

While Martinez obviously has the skills to put the ball in the air, the
rushing attack remains the bread-and-butter of the Nebraska offense. The team
has featured a 1,000-yard rusher in each of the last four seasons and in 2012
there were four different ball carriers who recorded at least 100 rushing
yards in a game. But make no mistake, while Rex Burkhead and Ameer Abdullah
are churning up the yards on the ground, Martinez will still be looking for
Kenny Bell, Quincy Enunwa and Jamal Turner further down the field.

The aggressive Nebraska offense is augmented by a punishing Husker defense,
one that ranked fourth in the country in passing yards allowed (168.1 ypg) and
ninth in pass efficiency defense (105.32). Unfortunately, the squad was
exposed quite a bit on the ground, permitting 192.5 ypg to rank 10th in the
conference and 90th nationally, but a lot of that had to do with giving up 539
yards to Wisconsin alone and another 715 combined rushing yards to UCLA and
Ohio State.

Cameron Meredith and Will Compton will aim to stem the tide here in the
opener, the defensive end and linebacker having made 39 and 35 career starts
for the Huskers already. With an average of close to eight tackles per game a
year ago, Compton more than showed his leadership, but now more of his
teammates need to follow his example.

"I think they (Wyoming) play really hard, and all indications are that they
switched the team around, so we are preparing for everything," Nebraska
offensive coordinator Tim Beck said in preparing for the Cowboys, "We want to
make sure our guys go out there and play fast, and play hard."

But as hard as the Cowboys might play, they are still no match for the Big Red
Machine on their home field.